Well no, that doesn't follow, as posters have already pointed out (since same-sex partners can just as easily be attached to children, in principle; heterosexual copulation no longer has a monopoly on reproduction)- and its moot since the antecedent of the conditional here is false, so we can just disregard the rest.
You can't well attach a child to his mother and father by attaching him to a man and a man or a woman and a woman, right (rhetorical question, don't bother answering, especially not with sarcasm)? And, regarding artificial reproduction, that just underscores how an opposite-sex couple is ordered towards procreation whereas a same-sex couple is not (hence their needing to turn to artificial reproduction or a man-woman union). Now, you're an intelligent person. You realize that in order for one to be committed to same-sex "marriage," one
must deny that marriage exists to attach mothers and fathers to their children, and also
must deny that marriage is the comprehensive union between a man and a woman that is ordered towards procreation.
But then I'd simply ask what you would replace them with? The most common answers I receive is that the public purpose of marriage is just to "recognize loving commitments" (or something to the effect) and that marriage just is a "union betwen individuals" or, again, something to the effect.
Sure. And they likely can make a pretty strong argument. Or one could just follow common sense that marriage serves a variety of purposes, no one any more legitimate or real than any other.
Those being?
That's too bad. Finding oneself committed to Thomism is like finding oneself in bed with an ugly women, or finding oneself without any money. My sympathies.
With all due respect, do you even know what Thomism is, really? You know, besides what a 3 minute perusal of its Wikipedia page offers?
If one abandons religious mandate, then one loses all reason to oppose ssm, or homosexuality in general. There is no secular basis to oppose SSM, that is not merely ad hoc and contrived.
That's flatly false.
Sovereign Dream: Building A Case Against Same-Sex "Marriage," Part 0: Preliminary Remarks
"The arguments I plan to provide against same-sex 'marriage' will simply consider pragmatic facts and reasons that are accessible to any individual, be he an ardent atheist, a devout Catholic, or an unabashed homosexual. In the interest of full disclosure, I am indeed Catholic. Yet my opposition to same-sex "marriage" doesn't at all wholly depend on my Catholicism. If I were to suddenly have some sort of anti-epiphany tomorrow and become an ardent atheist, for example, my opposition to same-sex "marriage" would not falter whatsoever."
Moreover, "opposition to homosexuality," which I take to be simply the seeing of homosexual acts as immoral, is not at all a supposition that is only available to the theist. Pretty much any virtue ethics or essentialist ethical system will do and one needn't be a theist to accept either (indeed, there are many atheists who accept both). Talk about ad hoc and contrived.
The opposite of the case; there is precious little in Thomism that is true, much less obvious or patently true. Not only is Thomism an unfortunate amalgamation of outdated and unwieldy Greek philosophy and Christian orthodoxy, it is pernicious to boot. After all, Thomas' comments about heretics were not simply unfortunate "all too human" views he shared with others of his era, they were directly tied to his philosophical/theological views.
I can only help but wonder how deep your well of knowledge on Thomism is. At any rate, I assure you that it is eminently defensible, certainly more so than the sort of naturalism that commits one to the supposition that no selves exist or that morality is just a social fiction, or that there are no intentional states, etc.
Not redefine it. But even if it was, redefining something is hardly a bad thing.
Of course its an effort to redefine it. Once again, there are a few supporters of ssm who are privy to this who can see that the only way in which one can make sense of ssm is by denying that marriage exists to attach mothers and fathers to their children or that marriage is the comprehensive union between a man and a woman that is ordered towards procreation, etc., etc.
Marriage has already been separated from procreation to a certain degree, I'm guessing what you refer to here as "social pathologies" are merely attitudes and behaviors you simply disagree with (again with the exaggeration), and I doubt you have evidence correlating the two in the first place.
Have you ever heard of divorce, for example? I don't think you'll find anyone who thinks that divorce has been of great benefit to children. Moreover, decades of published research in psychology, social science, and medicine demonstrate that children do best when raised by a mother and father (especially the biological parents) in a long-term marriage. That’s because a mother and a father each provide a unique and important contribution to their role as parents. Children who are raised – for example – in fatherless families suffer, on average, in every measure of well-being. They have higher levels of physical and mental illness, educational difficulties, poverty, substance abuse, criminal behavior, loneliness, and physical and sexual abuse. This is supported by multiple studies including Mary Parke, “Are Married Parents Really Better for Children?”
Center for Law and Social Policy, Policy Brief, May 2003, p. 1, and Kristin Anderson Moore et al., “Marriage From a Child’s Perspective: How Does Family Structure Affect Children, and What Can We Do about It?”
Child Trends Research Brief, June 2002, p. 1. Much of this research is referenced in David Popenoe,
Life Without Father (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996). See Yale Medical School’s Dr. Kyle Pruett,
Fatherneed: Why Father Care Is as Essential as Mother Care for Your Child (New York: Free Press, 2000), 17-34.
Um, ok? We're just supposed to take your word here, or what?
Well, I hoped you'd be able to see the obvious. In 100 percent of the cases, same-sex parenting deprives a child of a relationship with a mother or father (if not both the child's biological mother and father). We usually look at children who need to be adopted or raised by step-parents as unfortunate. By instituting ssm and along with it ss-parenting, we will be institutionally and intentionally depriving children of a mother or father, which is a gross injustice.
Indeed. Extending equal marriage rights to homosexuals is social and moral progress.
Progress towards absurdity and social pathologies, yes.
In the interest of brevity, detaching children from their mother and father and depriving them of a relationship with a parent of each sex and all the pernicious consequences this entails. Also the encouraging of the buying of humans like commodities vis-a-vis surrogacy. Much more could be said, of course.
I'm afraid its you missing the point. You can't take the moral high ground when you're arguing for immoral and unnecessary discrimination. Prohibiting gay rights is comparable to apartheid in any number of salient respects.
"Gay rights" is a loaded and question-begging term, just like this paragraph.